Saturday, August 16, 2008

Medical Versus Orthodontic Treatment Models
In disease-oriented disciplines such as medicine and dentistry, the idea of treatment planning and eventual treatment is based on the identification of disease; based on the information/data gathered, the disease that is identified and treatment options and approaches considered.

In the craniofacial aberrations called orthodontic malocclusions, one is not really describing a disease; Most malocclusion are the result of skeletal and dental variations that become extreme enough to disturb the patient’s esthetic or functional balance. In these circumstances orthodontic treatment is warranted.

Narrow Upper Arch - Before Treatment

Wider Upper Arch - After Treatment

Narrow Lower Arch Before Treatment

Wider Lower Arch - After Treatment

Orthodontic Treatment SequencingProperly sequencing an orthodontic treatment is crucial if one desires a successful outcome. Diagnosis is the key! Without a complete understanding of how cranio-mandibular complex develops and the surrounding neuromuscular system functions and operates will result in a need to rely on mechanical retention methods to hold together aspects of treatment that were not thoroughly understood and or acknowledged by the dentist.

Historically, there has been a tendency for orthodontist to treat to means and standards, but one must ask where does one position the bite physiologically?

One must synthesize the information to ask the relevant questions:

Why is there a Class II retrusive jaw - retrognathic?

Why is there a Class III protruding jaw - prognathic?

Why does my child or patient present with a right side Class II and the left side Class III relationship?

Why is there a deep overbite?

What produces the crowding or spacing?

Perhaps the positioning of the patient’s maxilla or mandible is too far forward or too far backward …. ? These are questions that are not always adequately addressed within the common orthodontic teachings.

OCCLUSION CONNECTIONS

FIRST TIMER?

Comprehensive Dentistry includes not only a level of knowledge and understanding, but also clinical skills in addressing the orthodontic/orthopedics. This esteemed discipline is what distinguishes a treating clinician to appreciate a level of diagnosis that enhances the restorative, cosmetic/aesthetic and TMD clinician.Future NM Orthodontic Programs Coming

PROGRAMS & CURRICULUM

AT THE PINNICLE - FUTURENM Orthodontic ProgramsMastering dentistry requires a skill and knowledge base that entails disciplining ones abilities in the use of orthodontic/ orthopedic mechanics. Without these fundamental set of clinical orthodontic/orthopedic techniques it is impossible to understand the neuromuscular and gnathologic concepts to their fullest.

Verticalization techniques from a NM position is an objective, but a foundational awareness of tooth movements and osseous bone development and anchorage is required to appreciate the techniques and methods used to finish the case.